Spinning reel with improved bail

ABSTRACT

The present invention provides a super-elastic, lightweight bail wire in combination with a bail assembly for use in connection with spinning-type fishing reels. In the most preferred embodiment the bail is made of an austenitic nickel-titanium alloy wire.

CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION

This application is a continuation-in-part of copending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/311,945, filed May 14, 1999, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,076,756 which application is incorporated herein by reference.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

1. Field of the Invention

This invention relates to fishing reels having a rotor with an associated bail assembly for wrapping line onto a spool, and, more particularly, to a super-elastic, lightweight bail wire in combination with the bail assembly.

2. Background

One well known style of fishing reel is the spinning-type fishing reel. A spinning reel typically has a housing with an oscillating spool at its forward end. A rotor rotates about the spool axis by cooperative movement of a crank handle and has an associated bail assembly that wraps line onto the oscillating spool. In one construction, the rotor has integrally formed ears at diametrically opposite locations that define a support for a pair of bail arms between which a U-shaped bail wire is connected.

The bail wire has three basic functions. One function involves converting the reel from a cast mode to a retrieve mode as the bail assembly shifts from an open, line casting position to a closed, line winding position. As the reel handle is turned the bail assembly assumes the closed position and thereafter provides a smooth transition of line from the edge of the bail wire over a line roller and onto the spool. Not much stiffness is required of the bail wire to achieve this function.

The second function also relates to the conversion from cast to retrieve mode and is required when the bail assembly opening and closing systems are on opposite ears of the rotor. Usually in this case an over-center spring acts against one of the bail arms to hold the bail assembly in the open position while a kick lever acts against the other bail arm upon the initial rotation of the reel handle to trip the bail assembly to the closed position. The bail wire serves to locate the two bail arms relative to each other, holding the two bail arms in the same angular position and causing the entire bail assembly to rotate as a single piece. Consequently, the bail wire must possess sufficient stiffness to overcome the biasing force of the over-center spring.

The third function of the bail wire involves the conversion from retrieve mode to cast mode. Here, the bail wire acts as a handle or lever which the user grasps and pulls in order to move the bail assembly into the open position. Sufficient stiffness must be present in the bail wire not only to cause both bail arms to rotate to the open position but also to resist overly rugged handling by the user.

The bail wire is typically one of the most complicated, and most susceptible to damage, components in a spinning reel. Damage generally occurs due to an accidental loading of the bail wire during shipping, storage or actual use. When the bail wire becomes mis-shaped several potential problems arise. The bail arms may bind and no longer freely rotate relative to the rotor, resulting in an increase of force required to open or close the bail. Binding also may prevent the bail arms from traveling to their fully closed position causing line twisting at the line roller. On reels having opening and closing systems on opposite sides of the rotor, a mis-shaped bail wire also may prevent the proper tripping of the bail assembly to its closed position or may allow the bail assembly to prematurely close during casting.

Since the magnitude of accidental loads are quite unpredictable, the strength required in the bail wire is also unpredictable. To minimize the frequency of bail-related failures, existing reels have been designed with extremely rigid bail wires to withstand very high loads with minimal deflection. A rigid bail wire, though, is more likely to absorb a high accidental load due to its inability to shift positions to escape the load. In addition, any load absorbed by a rigid bail wire is directly transmitted to the bail wire support structure, thereby potentially damaging the support structure.

As bail wires have been designed to be stronger to avoid deformation, they have become heavier. The weight of the bail wire adversely affects the rotational balance of the rotor assembly. It is one objective of designers of spinning reels to design a rotor assembly that operates smoothly. To achieve this end, the rotor assembly must be dynamically balanced. In the absence of proper balancing, the rotor assembly, which may be operated at relatively high speeds, wobbles detectably. The largest forces to be balanced are developed by the bail wire. It is conventional to add weight to the opposite side of the rotor so as to balance the reel, but doing so results in a heavier and more complex reel. The weight of the bail wire also tends to cause the bail assembly to close during the cast. To prevent this from occurring additional torque must be applied to the bail assembly by a spring (or a magnet) to hold it open during the cast. This extra torque must be overcome to close the bail by cranking the reel handle when converting from cast to retrieve modes.

There is thus a need for a spinning reel having a bail wire more resistant to accidental loadings and damage resulting therefrom.

There is a further need for a lightweight bail wire in a spinning reel to simplify rotor balancing and facilitate ease of operation.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The present invention provides a super-elastic, lightweight bail wire in combination with a bail assembly for use in connection with spinning-type fishing reels. The inventive bail wire provides enough stiffness to accommodate the basic functions of a bail wire, but has enough flexibility to allow temporary deflections in the bail wire. Because it is flexible the bail wire can more easily move to avoid bearing the entire force of an accidental load. The elastic property of the inventive bail wire also serves to dampen load forces transmitted to the bail wire support structure. This allows for a more conservative, lightweight design of the support structure. The light weight of the bail wire itself also provides for beneficial balancing and operational characteristics.

The inventive bail wire is implemented in a spinning-type fishing reel having a housing with an oscillating spool at its forward end, a crank handle mounted on the housing, a rotor mounted for rotation about the spool by cooperative movement of the handle, and a bail assembly that wraps fishing line onto the oscillating spool. The bail assembly includes a pair of bail arms fixedly attaching respective ends of a U-shaped bail wire.

In one aspect of the invention, the bail wire is formed of a material possessing a very high elastic recovery percentage. In a preferred embodiment, the bail wire is formed of a nickel-titanium alloy locked in its austenite form throughout an effective temperature range of use, and, most preferred, a nickel titanium alloy consisting essentially of 55-56 weight percent nickel and 44-45 weight percent titanium.

In another aspect of the invention, the bail wire is preselected by material composition and processing to possess a modulus of elasticity (E) and a moment of inertia (I) whose product (E×I) is equal to or less than 45 lbs.-in.² In a most preferred embodiment, the inventive bail wire possesses a product of (E×I) of approximately 5 lbs.-in.² as derived from the multiplicands of 8×10⁶ psi (E) and 6.4×10⁻⁷ in.⁴ (I).

In another aspect of the invention, the bail wire is preselected by material composition and processing to have a weight per unit length equal to or less than 1.0×10³¹ ³ lbs./in., and, most preferably, of about 0.7×10⁻³ lbs./in.

Most preferred is a bail wire meeting all the foregoing criteria, and particularly preferred, is a cylindrical bail wire comprising a nickel-titanium alloy locked in its austenitic form throughout an effective temperature range of use, and, most preferred, a nickel titanium alloy consisting essentially of 55-56 weight percent nickel and 44-45 weight percent titanium and having a diameter of about 0.06 in, a transition temperature of about −25° C. and exhibiting superelasticity in a temperature range of between −25° C. and 40° C.

A better understanding of the present invention, its several aspects, and its objects and advantages will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the following detailed description, taken in conjunction with the attached drawings, wherein there is shown and described the preferred embodiment of the invention, simply by way of illustration of the best mode contemplated for carrying out the invention.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 shows a perspective view of a spinning type fishing reel and is exemplary of the environment of the present invention.

FIG. 2 depicts the elastic recovery characteristics of various compositions.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT

Referring now to FIG. 1, a spinning-type fishing reel, according to the present invention, is shown at 10. The focus of the present invention is on the rotor 12, and more specifically the “bail” or “bail wire” 14, which is operable to wrap a supply of line around a spool 16 at the front of the reel 10. It should be understood that the reel 10 described herein is only exemplary of the environment for the invention. Many variations in the configuration of the reel 10 shown are contemplated by the invention.

The reel 10 has a main housing 18 which encases an operating mechanism (not shown). The housing 18 has an integrally formed stem 20 which terminates at a foot 22 which is attachable to a fishing rod (not shown) by conventional means.

The rotor 12 is rotated about a central longitudinal axis 24 by a crank handle 26 which is interrelated to the operating mechanism. As this occurs, the rotor 12 wraps the line continuously about the spool 16. The operating mechanism includes structure for oscillating the spool 16 in a fore and aft direction, as indicated by the double-headed arrow 28, as the rotor 12 rotates, to thereby assure that the line is evenly distributed along the axial extent of the spool 16.

The rotor 12 has a skirt 30, a spool shoulder 32 and diametrically, oppositely located first and second ears 34, 36, which cooperatively define a support for a movable bail assembly 38. The bail assembly 38 has a first bail arm 40 mounted to the first bail ear 34 and a second bail arm 42 mounted to the second bail ear 36. The ends of U-shaped bail wire 14 are fixedly attached, one each to the bail arms 40, 42, so that the bail arms 40, 42 and bail wire 14 are movable as a unit.

The first bail arm 40 is connected to the first bail ear 34 to be pivotable relative thereto about an axis. In like manner, the second bail arm 42 is attached to the second bail ear 36 for pivoting movement relative thereto about a parallel axis. With this arrangement, the bail assembly 38 is pivotable as a unit relative to the rotor 12 about the axes between a cast position and a retrieve position. Through an over-center bias mechanism (not shown) within at least one of the bail ears 34, 36, the bail arms 40, 42, and thus the entire bail assembly 38, are biased into the cast and retrieve positions as the bail assembly 38 approaches each.

Suitable structure for pivotably attaching the bail assembly 38 to the body 30 and for biasing the bail assembly 38 into the cast and retrieve positions is well known in the art. For example, one suitable structure is described in detail in U.S. Pat. No. 5,004,182, to Councilman, which is incorporated herein by reference.

When the bail assembly 38 is in the cast position, line is allowed to freely pay off the spool 16. To change the bail assembly 38 from the cast position to the retrieve position, the crank handle 26 is turned. Through a mechanism shown also in U.S. Pat. No. 5,004,182, rotation of the rotor 12 causes the bail assembly 38 to be deflected out of the cast position and into the retrieve position.

In the transition from the cast position to the retrieve position, the line is guided along an edge of the bail wire 14 and onto a line roller 44. With the reel 10 in the retrieve position, the line extends from the spool 16, around the cylindrical line roller 44, and forwardly from the line roller 44 away from the reel 10.

Operation of the crank handle 26, with the bail assembly 38 in the retrieve position causes the rotor 12 to rotate clockwise about the axis 24 as viewed from the front of the spool 16. This brings the line against the line roller 44 and causes the line to wrap around the spool 16 as the rotor 12 rotates.

Further reference is made to U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,713,529, 4,676,450 and 4,426,045, each incorporated herein by reference, for a more detailed explanation of typical spinning reel operating mechanisms.

Deflection as related to a bail wire is linearly related to the load divided by the product of the multiplicands E and I, where E is the modulus of elasticity (stiffness) of the bail wire material and I is the moment of inertia (related only to the shape of the bail wire's cross section). Most bail designs utilize round stainless steel wire which has a moment of inertia (I) equal to ¼πr⁴. The diameters range from 0.08 to 0.11 in. (2-2.8 mm) resulting in a calculated moment of inertia between 0.20×10⁻⁵ in.⁴ and 0.72×10⁻⁵ in. Elasticity of stainless steel wire ranges generally from 26 to 30 million psi. Thus, the value of E×I as heretofore employed in the spinning reel industry for conventional round stainless steel bail wire ranges from 52-215 lbs.-in.².

With respect to other known bail designs, one bail design utilizing a plastic molded bail transitions from a rectangular shape to an elliptical shape. The moment of inertia for this design varies from approximately 1.4×10⁻⁴ in.⁴ to 1.0×10⁻² in.⁴ in one direction and from 0.45×10⁻² in.⁴ to 2.0×10⁻² in.⁴ in the other direction where I is calculated for the rectangular section of the bail using the formulas I_(x)=({fraction (1/12)})bh³ and I_(y)=({fraction (1/12)})b³h, wherein b is the base length measurement and h is the height measurement, and for the elliptic section of the bail as I_(x)=¼πab³ and I_(y)=¼πa³b, wherein a is the semi-major axis and b is the semi-minor axis. Since the modulus of elasticity (E) of the plastic is roughly 2 million psi, the value of E×I as heretofore employed in the spinning reel industry for plastic bails ranges from 280-20000 lbs.-in.² in one direction and 9000-40000 lbs.-in.² in the other direction.

The conventional bail designs result in a relatively rigid bail wire as evidenced in the value of E×I.

The present invention, however, employs in one aspect a bail wire preselected to possess a product of E×I at or below 45 lbs.-in.² and, most preferably, around 5 lbs.-in.² In the most preferred embodiment E is approximately 8 million psi and I is approximately 6.4×10⁻⁷ in.⁴ Utilizing such a bail wire whose product of E×I is at or below a decreasing range from 45 lbs.-in.² downward results in improved flexibility in the bail wire so the bail wire can more easily avoid bearing the entire force of an accidental load and dampen load forces transmitted to the bail wire support structure while maintaining sufficient stiffness to accommodate the basic functions of a bail wire.

In another aspect of the invention, the inventive bail wire is preselected to possess a heretofore unachievably low weight per unit length. With a density ranging from 0.27-0.29 lbs./in.³ the aforedescribed stainless steel bails have a weight per unit length from approximately 1.3×10⁻³ to 2.7×10⁻³ lbs./in. The known plastic bails, having a density of approximately 0.04 lbs./in.³ and a cross section varying from 0.03 to 0.09 in.², possess a weight per unit of length ranging from approximately 1.2×10⁻³ to 4.0×10⁻³ lbs./in. The inventive bail provided herein, however, has a weight per unit length equal to or less than 1.0×10⁻³ lbs./in. and, most preferably, of about 0.7×10⁻³ lbs./in. Utilizing such a bail wire whose weight per unit length is at or below this range is results in improved reel balance and performance.

Both of the foregoing aspects of the invention are achieved in a nickel-titanium alloy bail wire and, most preferably, a cylindrical nickel-titanium bail wire containing 55-56 weight percent nickel and 44-45 weight percent titanium (about 50 atomic percent each). The inventive bail wire has an optimal diameter of about 0.06 in. and a density of about 0.25 lbs./in.³ Its modulus of elasticity is approximately 8 million psi, and it possesses a moment of inertia of about 6.4×10⁻⁷ in.⁴ Consequently, in the most preferred inventive bail wire the value of E×I is 5.12 lbs.-in.² and its weight per unit length is 0.71×10⁻³ lbs/in.

The nickel-titanium alloy preferred for the inventive bail is commonly referred to by the acronym NITINOL, which stands for Nickel Titanium Naval Ordinance Laboratory. Nitinol exhibits two unique properties depending upon its particular composition and the manner in which it is prepared, that is, “shape memory” and “superelasticity”. The shape memory effect describes the process of restoring the original shape of a plastically deformed sample by heating it to achieve a crystalline phase change known as “thermoelastic martensitic transformation”. Below the transition (or transformation) temperature, nitinol has a soft “martensitic” microstructure which is deformable. Heating the material converts it to its high strength, austenitic condition. The transformation to and from the two states can be repeated by subjecting the material to heating and cooling cycles.

On the other hand, the superelasticity effect is achieved when the alloy is stress induced in a temperature range above the transition temperature. This effect is caused by the stress-induced formation of some martensite above its normal temperature. Because it has been formed above its normal temperature, the martensite reverts, i.e., springs back, immediately to undeformed austenite as soon as the stress is removed.

As used herein the term “superelasticity” refers to a resiliency arising from the formation and reversion of stress-induced phase transformations characterized by a crystal lattice distortion.

Importantly, the preferred nitinol bail wire is locked in its austenite form through the temperature variants it will experience during use so that it may exhibit superelasticity. In the most preferred embodiment, the inventive bail wire is constructed of austenitic nitinol having the preferred composition described above, a transition temperature (i.e., an austenitic finish temperature) of −25° C.±5° C. and exhibiting superelasticity in a temperature range of −25° C. to 40° C.

Alloy composition, material processing, and ambient temperature are known to greatly effect the super-elastic properties of nickel-titanium compositions. But it is within the skill of the materials science art to produce a wire having the characteristics desired for the present invention. Indeed, reference is made to U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,895,438 and 5,637,089, whose disclosures are incorporated herein in their entirety, in this regard. Particular attention is directed to the '438 patent which discloses a method of fabricating an “optimized elastic” nitinol alloy exhibiting superelasticity over a temperature range of −25° C. to 40° C.

Other elements can be added in small amounts to adjust or fine tune the material properties of the preferred composition so long as they do not substantially alter the desired super-elastic property of the inventive bail wire. Excess nickel (to depress the transition temperature and increase yield strength), iron (to lower the transition temperature) and chromium (to decrease the hysteresis and lower the deformation stress of martensite) are common additions. A 0.1 to 2.0 weight percent substitution from the group consisting of Pl, Pd, Co, V, Al and Cu may be utilized as the resulting alloys may exhibit a transformation range of −120° C. to 20° C. Because common contaminants such as oxygen and carbon can also shift the transition temperature and degrade mechanical properties, it is also desirable to minimize the amount of these elements, preferably to below 500 ppm.

The shape of the inventive bail wire is set by constraining the nitinol element on a fixture of the desired shape and applying an appropriate heat treatment as is known in the art.

The advantages of the present invention are further illustrated in FIG. 2, which demonstrates the flexibility of the preferred bail wire composition as compared to stainless steel wire and titanium spring wire. When a 0.06 inch diameter cylindrical length of each type material is bent at a 90 degree angle around a 0.200 inch diameter mandrel, the nickel titanium wire exhibits an elastic recovery percentage of approximately 95% as compared to 50% for stainless steel and 70% for titanium spring wire. There is accordingly provided an inventive bail wire possessing a heretofore unachieved elastic recovery capability, that being an elastic recovery percentage exceeding 50%. This unique bail wire property may also be characterized with reference to the elastic limit of the bail wire material, meaning the degree to which it may be strained without incurring permanent deformation. Again taking stainless steel as a baseline, it may be said that such a wire will permanently deform when subjected to, at best, a four-tenths percent (0.4%) strain, meaning that should the wire be stressed (e.g. pulled) so as to incur more than 0.4% strain (e.g. elongation) it will suffer meaningful permanent deformation and will not return to its original shape (e.g. length) upon release of the stress. And whereas a titanium wire will possess an elastic limit as above-described of about one percent (1.0%), a nickel-titanium wire far surpasses both the stainless steel and titanium by possessing an elastic limit of about eight percent (8%). In fact, with reference to well known stress-strain curves, it may be appreciated that for nickel-titanium the slope of the stress-strain curve proceeds linearly from about 0-1.5% strain and then turns substantially horizontal, exhibiting little unresolved stress, until reaching its elastic limit at about an 8% strain. Should a nickel-titanium wire be released from stress prior to reaching the elastic limit it will return to very near its original shape. It is believed that, plastics included, no bails have heretofore possessed an elastic limit exceeding three percent (3%). There is accordingly provided by the present invention a bail possessing an elastic limit exceeding three percent (3%).

While the invention has been described with a certain degree of particularity, it is understood that the invention is not limited to the embodiment(s) set for herein for purposes of exemplification, but is to be limited only by the scope of the attached claim or claims, including the full range of equivalency to which each element thereof is entitled. 

What is claimed is:
 1. In a spinning-type fishing reel having a housing with an oscillating spool at its forward end, a crank handle mounted on the housing, a rotor mounted for rotation about the spool by cooperative movement of the handle, and a bail assembly that wraps fishing line onto the oscillating spool, the improvement comprising a bail wire formed of an austenitic nickel-titanium alloy possessing superelasticity throughout an effective temperature range of use.
 2. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 1 wherein the alloy consists essentially of 55-56 weight percent nickel and 44-45 weight percent titanium.
 3. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 1 wherein the alloy has a transition temperature of about −25° C.
 4. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 1 wherein the effective temperature range of use comprises a temperature range of −25° C. to 40° C.
 5. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 1 wherein the bail wire is cylindrical in shape.
 6. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 5 wherein the bail wire has a diameter of about 0.06 in.
 7. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 6 wherein the bail wire possesses an elastic recovery percentage of about 95% upon being bent at a 90 degree angle around a 0.200 inch diameter mandrel.
 8. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 1 wherein the bail wire further has a modulus of elasticity (E) and a moment of inertia (I) whose product (E×I) is equal to or less than 45 lbs.-in.².
 9. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 8 wherein the product (E×I) is approximately 5 lbs.-in.².
 10. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 9 wherein E is approximately 8 million psi.
 11. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 10 wherein the bail wire is cylindrical in shape and I is approximately 6.4×10⁻⁷ in.⁴.
 12. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 1 wherein the bail wire further has a weight per unit length equal to or less than 1.0×10⁻³ lbs./in.
 13. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 12 wherein the weight per unit length is about 0.7×10⁻³ lbs./in.
 14. In a spinning-type fishing reel having a housing with an oscillating spool at its forward end, a crank handle mounted on the housing, a rotor mounted for rotation about the spool by cooperative movement of the handle, and a bail assembly that wraps fishing line onto the oscillating spool, the improvement comprising a bail having a modulus of elasticity (E) and a moment of inertia (I) whose product (E×I) is equal to or less than 45 lbs.-in.².
 15. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 14 wherein the product (E×I) is approximately 5 lbs.-in.².
 16. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 15 wherein E is approximately 8 million psi.
 17. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 16 wherein the bail is cylindrical in shape and I is approximately 6.4×10⁻⁷ in.⁴.
 18. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 14 wherein the bail comprises an austenitic nickel-titanium alloy wire possessing superelasticity throughout an effective temperature range of use.
 19. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 18 wherein the alloy consists essentially of 55-56 weight percent nickel and 44-45 weight percent titanium.
 20. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 18 wherein the alloy has a transition temperature of about −25° C.
 21. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 18 wherein the effective temperature range of use comprises a temperature range of −25° C. to 40° C.
 22. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 18 wherein the bail is cylindrical in shape.
 23. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 22 wherein the bail has a diameter of about 0.06 in.
 24. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 14 wherein the bail further has a weight per unit length equal to or less than 1.0×10⁻³ lbs./in.
 25. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 24 wherein the weight per unit length is about 0.7×10³¹ ³ lbs./in.
 26. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 24 wherein the bail comprises an austenitic nickel-titanium alloy wire possessing superelasticity throughout an effective temperature range of use.
 27. In a spinning-type fishing reel having a housing with an oscillating spool at its forward end, a crank handle mounted on the housing, a rotor mounted for rotation about the spool by cooperative movement of the handle, and a bail assembly that wraps fishing line onto the oscillating spool, the improvement comprising a bail having a weight per unit length equal to or less than 1.0×10⁻³ lbs./in.
 28. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 27 wherein the weight per unit length is about 0.7×10⁻³ lbs./in.
 29. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 27 wherein the bail comprises an austenitic nickel-titanium alloy wire possessing superelasticity throughout an effective temperature range of use.
 30. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 29 wherein the alloy consists essentially of 55-56 weight percent nickel and 44-45 weight percent titanium.
 31. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 29 wherein the alloy has a transition temperature of about −25° C.
 32. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 29 wherein the effective temperature range of use comprises a temperature range of −25° C. to 40° C.
 33. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 29 wherein the bail is cylindrical in shape.
 34. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 33 wherein the bail has a diameter of about 0.06 in.
 35. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 34 wherein the bail possesses an elastic recovery percentage of about 95% upon being bent at a 90 degree angle around a 0.200 inch diameter mandrel.
 36. In a spinning-type fishing reel having a housing with an oscillating spool at its forward end, a crank handle mounted on the housing, a rotor mounted for rotation about the spool by cooperative movement of the handle, and a bail assembly that wraps fishing line onto the oscillating spool, the improvement comprising a bail possessing superelasticity throughout an effective temperature range of use.
 37. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 36 wherein the effective temperature range of use comprises a temperature range of −25° C. to 40° C.
 38. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 36 wherein the bail comprises an austenitic nickel-titanium alloy wire.
 39. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 38 wherein the alloy consists essentially of 55-56 weight percent nickel and 44-45 weight percent titanium.
 40. In a spinning-type fishing reel having a housing with an oscillating spool at its forward end, a crank handle mounted on the housing, a rotor mounted for rotation about the spool by cooperative movement of the handle, and a bail assembly that wraps fishing line onto the oscillating spool, the improvement comprising a bail possessing an elastic recovery percentage of greater than 50% upon being bent at a 90 degree angle around a 0.200 inch diameter mandrel.
 41. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 40 wherein the bail wire possesses an elastic recovery percentage of about 95%.
 42. In a spinning-type fishing reel having a housing with an oscillating spool at its forward end, a crank handle mounted on the housing, a rotor mounted for rotation about the spool by cooperative movement of the handle, and a bail assembly that wraps fishing line onto the oscillating spool, the improvement comprising a bail possessing an elastic limit of greater than 3%.
 43. A spinning-type fishing reel according to claim 42 wherein the wire possesses an elastic limit of about 8%. 